Re: elephant burials

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Sujet : Re: elephant burials
De : martinharran (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Martin Harran)
Groupes : talk.origins
Date : 28. Mar 2024, 14:02:41
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On Sat, 23 Mar 2024 13:46:25 +0000, Martin Harran
<martinharran@gmail.com> wrote:

[...]

I think we are maybe drifting back towards a discussion we had some
time ago about the nature of evidence   - not that I have any problem
with that!


I'd like to go back to something from that discussion, but I'll do it
here rather than add length to the 'burial' part of the discussion - I
will refer back to this post in its own place. I also think this is
relevant to other threads here.

In the previous discussion, I referred to my own understanding of
evidence being heavily influenced by the insights I gained from the
trial of the murderer of my sister-in-law, Attracta Harron.

Attracta went missing on the morning of 12 Dec 2003 whilst walking
home from Lifford to Strabane from weekday Mass. On 28th March, 2004,
21-year-old Trevor Hamilton was charged with Attracta's murder and
trial began on 27th February, 2006. The main evidence [1] against him
was:

===========================================

Traces of Attracta's blood were found in Hamilton's car which was
burnt out at his home on the afternoon of the day she disappeared.
Hamilton claimed he didn't set fire to the car, that it must have been
an intruder but in something of a Sherlock Holme's moment, it turned
out that the family dogs in a pen alongside the car never barked! He
also initially claimed he had not left the house that day but cell
tower records of his mobile phone showed that he had been out and
about in the Strabane that day and a neighbour also came forward to
say she had seen him driving the car.

A farmer from the area reported that around the time that Attracta
disappeared, he had to give way in his tractor to a speeding red car
(Hamilton's car was red) with a woman in the passenger seat with what
looked like streaks of blood on her face. He could not identify the
driver but when he saw Attracta's photo in the newspapers the next
day, he was absolutely sure that she was the woman in the car.

The police recovered ashes from several fires in Hamilton's back
garden and among partially burnt items they found an ATM receipt for a
cash withdrawal she had made; rosary beads and a page from a religious
pamphlet, both limited circulation and matching ones carried by
Attracta; a business card matching one given to her by an architect
involved in the new library in Strabane where she worked; a plaster
which matched an open box of plasters in her home (her husband
explained that she used the plasters on her heels as he shows were
loose fitting).

Attracta's body was found buried in a shallow grave less than 200
yards from Hamilton's home. She had been buried in a large, branded
feed bag matching ones at Hamilton's home (his father drove for a
local feed company whose brand was on the bag) and was covered with
concrete slabs which matched unused ones lying around Hamilton's
house. The pathologist determined that Attracta had died from a severe
blow to her head, likely from an axe-like implement but her body was
too badly decomposed to decide whether or not she had been sexually
assaulted.

Hamilton had been released from prison just four months earlier he had
been released from prison on licence after serving half of a
seven-year sentence for rape and other offences, including threats to
kill; the risk he posed to the public, especially adult women, was
assessed as high (level 3). [2] The prosecution were allowed to
introduce this previous case due to similarities between the two
crimes [3]. For example, the car used by Hamiton in the rape for which
he had been convicted had the handle and window winder removed from
the passenger door; they were also missing on the car burnt-out at his
home.

===========================================

None of the above evidence directly tied Hamiton to Attracta's death
but the prosecution pointed out that Hamilton murdering her was the
only explanation for the evidence in its totality. Charging the jury
at the end of the six-week trial, the judge addressed the same issue.
He explained to the jury that the various elements of evidence are
like strands of a rope; individual strands might be very weak but
entwined together, they could make a very strong rope. Even if one or
two of them got broken, the rope could still be strong. He told the
jury that they should not get caught up too much in the value of
individual pieces of evidence, they should look at the overall picture
presented by the evidence in total.

Hamilton was found unanimously found guilty, a verdict with which the
judge said he totally agreed. Stating that "What you did to Mrs
Harron, a good and loving woman, was at once nauseating and
horrifying, it was the stuff of nightmares and the epitome of the loss
of innocence in our community … What that poor woman experienced as
you prepared to execute her, whatever weapon you used to accomplish
it, was so appalling that it demands retribution of the most severe
kind.", he sentenced Hamilton to the first 'whole life' sentence ever
imposed in Northern Ireland [4]

I think that *totality* of evidence is what gets ignored by posters
like Ron Dean who try to pick holes in isolated pieces of evidence
whilst handwaving away the *overall weight* of evidence from various
sources.

Each piece of evidence in Attracta's trial above can be argued against
on its own.  The traces of blood were evidence that Attracta's body
had been in his car but there was no direct evidence to show that he
put it there. He could have claimed (but did not do so) that the items
from the fire were because he had found her handbag tossed into a
ditch and decided to get rid of it in case it would be associated with
him. The farmer could not identify the driver of the car and only
identified Attracta from a newspaper photo. The property around his
house was not particularly secured and anyone could have got access to
the feed bag and slabs, and so on. 

In the same way, Dean and others try to build their case, for example,
on parts of the fossil record that are incomplete whilst ignoring the
overwhelming fossil evidence that conclusively shows an overall
pattern of nesting, descent and inheritance.
 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[1] More details: https://attracta.martinharran.com/openstate.htm

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trevor_Hamilton

[3] We previously discussed this briefly. The introduction of previous
conviction was the first case allowed under The Criminal Justice
(Evidence) (Northern Ireland) Order 2004 which was the NI
implementation of the  UK Criminal Justice Act 2003.

[4] The Appeals Court later changed this to a 35-year tariff. For the
benefit, of those unfamiliar with the UK legal system, that does not
mean he gets out after 35 years, it means he cannot even be
*considered* for parole for at least 35 years.


Date Sujet#  Auteur
18 Mar 24 * elephant burials14Burkhard
19 Mar 24 +- Re: elephant burials1Richmond
22 Mar 24 `* Re: elephant burials12Martin Harran
22 Mar 24  `* Re: elephant burials11Burkhard
22 Mar 24   `* Re: elephant burials10Martin Harran
22 Mar 24    `* Re: elephant burials9Burkhard
23 Mar 24     `* Re: elephant burials8Martin Harran
23 Mar 24      `* Re: elephant burials7Burkhard
23 Mar 24       `* Re: elephant burials6Martin Harran
24 Mar 24        +- Re: elephant burials1vallor
24 Mar 24        +* Re: elephant burials2Burkhard
28 Mar 24        i`- Re: elephant burials1Martin Harran
28 Mar 24        `* Re: elephant burials2Martin Harran
9 Apr 24         `- Re: elephant burials1Martin Harran

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